Tibetan
Relics Well Preserved
(05/17/2001)
"In my view, it is ridiculous and shameful for the Dalai Lama
to say that the Chinese government has destroyed and looted all the
Tibetan relics," said Gyayang, director of the Tibet Autonomous
Regional Administration of Cultural Heritage.
In an exclusive interview with Xinhua, Gyayang said China established
a special organization for protecting Tibetan relics as early as
the 1950s. The central government included the Potala Palace and
eight other historical sites in Tibet in the first group of key
relics under state-level protection.
The official disclosed that over the past two decades and more,
the central government has spent more than 300 million yuan (36.14
million U.S. dollars) on the repair of more than 1,400 temples in
Tibet, and as a result, a large amount of relics in the region are
well protected.
Currently, the central government allocates 4 million to 5 million
yuan for protecting Tibetan relics annually.
Relics experts said Thursday that Tibet boasts many rare relics,
and especially those of Tibetan Buddhism, adding that it will take
at least 20 years, to perform a thorough investigation of the region's
relics.
Relics departments are sorting out) the relics at the Potala Palace,
which is on the World Heritage list. They have set up files on 120,000
relics, which make up just a small part of the palace's total.
Exhibited at the 10,000-square-meter exhibition hall of the Tibet
Autonomous Regional Museum are several thousand relics. The relics
include sutras hand-written by leaders of various religious sects,
such as one written during the Yuan Dynasty (1271-1368), time-tested
Buddha figures and Tangka, a kind of scroll painting mounted on
brocade, which developed out of mural painting in the 7th century
and flourished from the 14th to 19th centuries.
The museum also houses gold vessels used for choosing reincarnated
soul boys of Dalai and Panchen lamas and over 1,200- year-old Buddhist
Scriptures on pipal (palm leaves used as paper). All of these precious
Tibetan Buddhism relics are protected by toughened glass and a constant
temperature and humidity level.
Qoizhoin, a worker at the museum, said the museum houses sutras
inscribed on birch bark, which is more than 1,000 years old. The
characters on the birch bark are still very clear and easy to identify.
More rare relics are stored in the region's 1,000 other temples.
The Sagya Monastery, the major temple of the Sakyapa sect of Tibetan
Buddhism, stores more than 6,000 ancient Buddhist statues, a large
number of relics from the Yuan Dynasty and numerous volumes of sutras.
Preserved in the Samye Monastery, the first temple in Tibet, are
fingerprints said to be of the initiator of the Nyingmapa sect of
Tibetan Buddhism and the doss of the fifth Dalai Lama.
(People's Daily)
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